www.nytimes.com Open in urlscan Pro
151.101.129.164  Public Scan

URL: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/29/us/kentucky-anti-transgender-bill.html
Submission: On March 30 via manual from US — Scanned from US

Form analysis 1 forms found in the DOM

POST https://nytimes.app.goo.gl/?link=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/29/us/kentucky-anti-transgender-bill.html&apn=com.nytimes.android&amv=9837&ibi=com.nytimes.NYTimes&isi=284862083

<form method="post" action="https://nytimes.app.goo.gl/?link=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/29/us/kentucky-anti-transgender-bill.html&amp;apn=com.nytimes.android&amp;amv=9837&amp;ibi=com.nytimes.NYTimes&amp;isi=284862083" data-testid="MagicLinkForm"
  style="visibility: hidden;"><input name="client_id" type="hidden" value="web.fwk.vi"><input name="redirect_uri" type="hidden"
    value="https://nytimes.app.goo.gl/?link=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/29/us/kentucky-anti-transgender-bill.html&amp;apn=com.nytimes.android&amp;amv=9837&amp;ibi=com.nytimes.NYTimes&amp;isi=284862083"><input name="response_type" type="hidden"
    value="code"><input name="state" type="hidden" value="no-state"><input name="scope" type="hidden" value="default"></form>

Text Content

Sections
SEARCH
Skip to content
U.S.

SUBSCRIBE FOR $1/WEEKLog in
Wednesday, March 29, 2023
Today’s Paper
SUBSCRIBE FOR $1/WEEK
U.S.|G.O.P. Lawmakers Override Kentucky Governor’s Veto on Anti-Trans Law

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/29/us/kentucky-anti-transgender-bill.html
 * Give this article
 * 
 * 

Advertisement

Continue reading the main story



Supported by

Continue reading the main story





G.O.P. LAWMAKERS OVERRIDE KENTUCKY GOVERNOR’S VETO ON ANTI-TRANS LAW

The Kentucky measure bans access to gender-transition care for young people, and
West Virginia’s governor signed a similar bill on Wednesday. Passage of bans
also appears imminent in Idaho and Missouri.

 * Send any friend a story
   
   As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can
   read what you share.
   
   
   Give this article
 * 
 * 
 * Read in app
   


State Senator Max Wise spoke during a news conference on Wednesday in support of
S.B. 150 in Frankfort, Ky.Credit...Jon Cherry/Getty Images


By Campbell Robertson and Ernesto Londoño

March 29, 2023Updated 8:34 p.m. ET

The Republican-dominated Kentucky legislature voted overwhelmingly on Wednesday
to override the governor’s veto of a bill that will create a host of new
regulations and restrictions on transgender youth, including banning access to
what doctors call gender-affirming health care.

The bill, described by L.G.B.T.Q. rights groups as among the most extreme in the
nation, was vetoed on Friday by Gov. Andy Beshear, a Democrat, but it was
overridden in both the State House and Senate, where Republicans hold
supermajorities.

The law, which began as a fairly narrow bill but steadily grew into a much
larger package of restrictions, specifically bans surgeries, puberty blockers
and hormone therapy for children under 18. It also forbids school districts from
requiring or recommending that students be referred to by pronouns that “do not
conform to a student’s biological sex as indicated on the student’s original,
unedited birth certificate.”

The law also compels doctors to cease treating patients who are undergoing
gender-transition care, adding that if physicians deem that ceasing treatment is
likely to “harm the minor,” they may set a time frame to “systematically” phase
out treatment.



Advertisement

Continue reading the main story



In addition to the new rules governing transgender youth, the law also puts
limits on what can be discussed in schools, requiring schools to give notice to
parents about any program on the subject of sexuality, barring teaching on
sexuality below the sixth-grade level and banning lessons at any grade level
about gender identity or sexual orientation.

The law is part of a wave of legislation filed in recent years by Republican
state lawmakers to restrict and regulate the lives of transgender youth. At
least 10 states have passed similar bans on transition care, including Arizona,
Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Tennessee and Utah.

On Wednesday, the governor of West Virginia signed a bill into law that will
also ban transition care for minors unless the child has been “diagnosed as
suffering from severe gender dysphoria” by at least two health care providers
and has parental consent. In two more states — Idaho and Missouri — the passage
of bans appears imminent, according to Erin Reed, a legislative analyst who is
opposed to bills limiting access to transgender medical care.

“We are going to have to survey the damage” after this legislative session
concludes, Ms. Reed said. “But I do think that most of these bills are going to
be overturned in court, and I’m hopeful that the next wave of news in the summer
brings some level of relief to trans Americans.”

Arkansas was the first state to pass a ban on medical care for transgender
minors, which sparked a court fight that has prevented the ban from taking
effect. The Kentucky chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union has vowed to
challenge the state’s law in the courts, meaning that its implementation, too,
will most likely be delayed.



Advertisement

Continue reading the main story



While the Kentucky override happened quickly, it was largely expected given the
state legislature’s strong conservative bent. The vote fell almost, though not
entirely, along party lines.

Mr. Beshear, a first-term governor, came to office by defeating a particularly
unpopular Republican incumbent, Matt Bevin, who had picked fights with teachers
throughout his term. Mr. Beshear is up for re-election this year, and his
holding onto the office is hardly a given in a state that former President
Donald J. Trump won in 2020 by 26 percentage points. Still, Mr. Beshear has
maintained a sturdy popularity by focusing on practical governance, including
responding to an exhausting barrage of natural disasters that has pummeled
Kentucky over the last four years.

But the intense emotions around the issues of schools, gender and sexual
identity are much more politically volatile. An attempt this month by a group of
Republican state senators to soften a version of the bill, removing some of its
more controversial elements, fizzled after a conservative Christian group
organized a letter-writing campaign. Then on Wednesday, people opposed to the
bill came by the hundreds to the State Capitol to protest.

With the shouts and chants of demonstrators ringing out behind him, State
Senator Max Wise, a Republican and the bill’s sponsor, declared that the goal of
his legislation “was to strengthen parental engagement and communication in
children’s education while protecting the safety of our children.”

Mr. Wise took particular issue with Mr. Beshear’s remarks in a statement
accompanying his veto that the bill would turn teachers into investigators.



Advertisement

Continue reading the main story



In that statement, Mr. Beshear also said that the bill “strips freedom from
parents to make personal family decisions” and warned that it would “cause an
increase in suicide among Kentucky’s youth.”

Henry Berg-Brousseau, a 24-year-old transgender activist who appeared at
legislative hearings to lobby against such bills, died by suicide in December.
His mother, Dr. Karen Berg, is a Democratic state senator, and spoke out against
the bill on Wednesday.

“To say this is a bill protecting children is completely disingenuous,” she said
on the floor of the Senate. “And to call this a parents’ rights bill is an
absolute despicable affront to me personally.”







Advertisement

Continue reading the main story




SITE INDEX




SITE INFORMATION NAVIGATION

 * © 2023 The New York Times Company

 * NYTCo
 * Contact Us
 * Accessibility
 * Work with us
 * Advertise
 * T Brand Studio
 * Your Ad Choices
 * Privacy Policy
 * Terms of Service
 * Terms of Sale
 * Site Map
 * Canada
 * International
 * Help
 * Subscriptions


Already have an account? Log in.


KEEP READING WITH ONE OF THESE OPTIONS:

SALE: ENDS SOON


ALL OF THE TIMES.
ALL IN ONE SUBSCRIPTION.


$6.25 $1/WEEK

BILLED AS $4 EVERY 4 WEEKS FOR YOUR FIRST YEAR.

Subscribe now


LIMITED ACCESS
TO THE TIMES.

READ SOME FREE ARTICLES AND ENJOY PERSONALIZED EMAIL BRIEFINGS.

Create a free account

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Cancel or pause anytime.
Offer for a New York Times All Access subscription; current subscribers not
eligible. Subscription excludes print edition. Your payment method will
automatically be charged in advance the introductory rate of $4 every 4 weeks
for 1 year, and after 1 year the standard rate of $25 every 4 weeks. Your
subscription will continue until you cancel. Cancellation takes effect at the
end of your current billing period. Taxes may apply. Offer terms are subject to
change.
© 2023 The New York Times Company
Help
Feedback